Hungarian pengő paper money
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hungarian pengő paper money (Hungarian: pengő papírpénz) was part of the physical form of Hungary's historical currency, the Hungarian pengő. Paper money usually meant banknotes, which were issued (either in fact or in name) by the Hungarian National Bank. Later - during and after the second world war - other types of paper money appeared, including emergency money, bonds and savings certificates.
In the beginning, paper money was designed abroad Hungary, and were printed using simple methods. Later, developed techniques were used creating banknotes which reflected stability. After the war, in parallel with the value loss, the quality of banknotes decreased. Finally, not even serial numbers were printed on the notes.
Contents |
[edit] Banknotes
[edit] First series (1926)
The first series of pengő banknotes were printed in 1926 with the following denominations: 5 P, 10 P, 20 P, 50 P, and 100 P. All banknotes were designed by Ferenc Helbing. Due to the poor printing technology (offset printing) counterfeits appeared in a short time. The situation was so serious that the banknotes had to be replaced with a new series in a short time. As a consequence, these belong to the most valued collector rarities among the Hungarian banknotes.
1926 series | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Obverse | Reverse | Printed | Issued | Withdrawn | |
5 pengő | 150 × 75 mm | Portrait of Count István Széchenyi by Friedrich Amerling | View of the Széchenyi Chain Bridge | 1 March 1926 | 27 December 1926 | 30 June 1929 | ||
10 pengő | 157 × 78 mm | Ferenc Deák | The Hungarian Parliament Building | 30 June 1930 | ||||
20 pengő | 166 × 84 mm | Lajos Kossuth | Géza Mészöly's painting: "Balaton scene" | 31 May 1931 | ||||
50 pengő | 175 × 90 mm | Portrait of Ferenc II Rákóczi by Ádám Mányoki | Károly Lotz's painting: "Stallions in the shower" | 31 March 1935 | ||||
100 pengő | 182 × 96 mm | Portrait of King Matthias Corvinus by Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio | View of the Buda Castle with the Danube | 30 April 1933 |
[edit] Second series (1927-1932)
The first denomination of the second series of pengő banknotes was the 1000 pengő bill, designed by Zoltán Egri.[1] Contrary to the 1926-series, this banknote (as well as the other bills of these series) was printed using intaglio printing. The next banknote of the series is the 5 pengő bill (dated 1928), then the 10 pengő (1929), 20 and 100 pengő (1930), and the 50 pengő bills (1932) were issued. These banknotes were designed by Álmos Jaschik.[2]
1927-1932 series | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Obverse | Reverse | Printed | Issued | Withdrawn | |
5 pengő | 150 × 75 mm | Portrait of Count István Széchenyi by Friedrich Amerling | View of the Széchenyi Chain Bridge | 1 August 1928 | 20 December 1928 | 31 December 1930 | ||
10 pengő | 159 × 80 mm | Ferenc Deák | The Hungarian Parliament Building | 1 February 1929 | 11 December 1929 | 30 November 1939 | ||
20 pengő | 165 × 85 mm | Lajos Kossuth | The Hungarian National Bank building | 2 January 1930 | 20 November 1930 | 31 October 1943 | ||
50 pengő | 168 × 86 mm | Sándor Petőfi | János Visky's painting: "Herding in Hortobágy" | 1 October 1932 | 10 September 1934 | 6 May 1946 | ||
100 pengő | 176 × 91 mm | Portrait of King Matthias Corvinus by Andrea Mantegna | View of the Buda Castle with the Danube | 1 July 1930 | 25 October 1932 | |||
1000 pengő | 192 × 112 mm | The Hungária-head from the Statue of Liberty in Arad | Gyula Benczúr's painting: "Baptism of Vajk" | 1 July 1927 | 27 December 1927 | 14 June 1945 |
[edit] Low denomination series (1938)
In 1938, a series of 50 fillér, 1, 2, and 5 pengő bills were designed by Franke Ruppert. The aim of the National Bank was to quickly supply the territories of which Hungary gained control according to the Vienna Awards with low denomination money. However, only the 1 and 5 pengő bills were put into circulation but printer's proof of the others also exist. Since the amount of 1 P bills allowed by the serial number proved to be insufficient, a second issue was printed that was marked with a star in the serial number.
1927-1932 series | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Obverse | Reverse | Printed | Issued | Withdrawn | |
50 fillér | 81 × 48 mm | Female model | Indication of value in different languages | 15 January 1938 | never | - | ||
1 pengő | 99 × 56 mm | 20 January 1941 | 10 March 1942 | |||||
1 pengő (2nd issue) |
||||||||
2 pengő | 110 × 61 mm | never | - | |||||
5 pengő | 120 × 65 mm | 5 November 1938 | 31 July 1939 |
[edit] War series (1936-1941)
The first banknote of the series is the 10 pengő bill, which is dated 1936 but was not put into circulation earlier than 1939. This banknote was followed by the 5 pengő bill (dated 1939), then the 2 pengő (1940) and the 20 pengő bills (1941). A 100 pengő note was also planned, however, it was printed in a slightly different version and only used by the evacuated troops in Austria. The banknotes of the series were designed by Endre Horváth[3])
1936-1941 series | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Description | Date of | ||||
Obverse | Reverse | Obverse | Reverse | printing | issue | withdrawal | ||
2 pengő | 114 × 58 mm | Female model | Mother with her child | 15 July 1940 | 20 January 1941 | 10 March 1942 | ||
5 pengő | 121 × 59 mm | Female model | Statue of Sebestyén Tinódi Lantos by Gyula Bezerédi | 25 October 1939 | 18 March 1940 | 5 August 1942 | ||
28 April 1945 | 6 May 1946 | |||||||
10 pengő | 158 × 71 mm | Mary with Jesus and a female model | Statue of king St. Stephen by Alajos Stróbl | 22 December 1936 | 15 May 1939 | |||
20 pengő | 164 × 75 mm | Female model | Young wife and old man in the fields | 15 January 1941 | 16 November 1942 | |||
100 pengő | ? | Female model | Coat of arms and male nudes | ? | never | - |
[edit] Veszprém series (1943)
Series of banknotes were printed in Veszprém by the evacuated Szálasi government and circulated in the Nazi-ruled part of Hungary in 1944.
First, the 100 P bill of 1930 and the 10 P bill of 1936 were reprinted in late 1944. These banknotes were marked with a star in the serial number (1 pengő bills of 1938 with a star in the serial number are not Veszprém issues), and are much less common than those without it. Some of the 100 P banknotes were overstamped with an 1000 P adhesive stamp - these were later replaced by the 1000 P bill of 1943.
Later in 1944 there was a plan to issue a new series of 10, 100 and 1000 P banknotes - all designed by Endre Horváth. Due to lack of time, only the 1000 P bill was officially put into circulation, 100 P bills were printed but only used by the evacuated troops in Austria, the 10 P bill is only known as printer's proof. The 100 and 1000 P bills were designed using elements of earlier banknotes.
In the last days of the Szálasi government, some of the bills (10 P of 1936, 20 P of 1941, 50 P of 1932, 100 P of 1930 and 1000 P of 1943) were overstamped with a green arrow-cross stamp - however, most of these overstamped banknotes are considered to be fake (i.e. overstamped later to turn these common banknotes into more expensive 'rarities'): stamp inks are tend to be very fresh on these banknotes and it is not clear what the purpose of such overstamping would have been.
1943 series | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Obverse | Reverse | Printed | Issued | Withdrawn | |
10 pengő | ? mm | Female model | Woman with sickle and wheat | 24 February 1943 | never | - | ||
100 pengő | 156 × 100 mm | Female model | Coat of arms and male nudes | never (see text) | - | |||
1000 pengő | 183 × 100 mm | The Hungária-head from the Statue of Liberty in Arad | View of Buda with the statue of St. Gellért | 4 November 1944 | 14 June 1945 |
[edit] Postwar inflation series (1945-1946)
It is not hard to see the cycle pattern in the hyperinflation pengő notes. The cycle was 6 digit, meaning that notes with the same number before the denomination (e.g. 10000 pengő, 10000 milpengő, 10000, b.-pengő) had the same design.
In December 1945, the government tried (and failed) to take the inflation under control by overstamping 1000 and 10000 pengő banknotes (see notes with adhesive stamps below). The denominations of already issued notes also did not change, but people had to buy the stamps (the price of one such stamp was 4 times the value of the note - the result was the same as if 75% of the issued notes had been withdrawn).
1945-1946 series | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Obverse | Reverse | Printed | Issued | Withdrawn | |
50 pengő | 175 × 90 mm | Portrait of Ferenc II Rákóczi by Ádám Mányoki | Károly Lotz's painting: "Stallions in the shower" | 5 April 1945 | 5 June 1945 | 6 May 1946 | ||
100 pengő | 183 × 97 mm | Portrait of King Matthias Corvinus by Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio | View of the Buda Castle with the Danube | 9 May 1945 | ||||
500 pengő | 177 × 86 mm | Female model | Indication of value in different languages | 15 May 1945 | 1 June 1945 | |||
1000 pengő | 185 × 90 mm | Female model | Indication of value in different languages | 15 July 1945 | 16 July 1945 | 31 December 1945 | ||
1000 pengő (red adhesive stamp) |
185 × 90 mm | Female model | Indication of value in different languages | 19 December 1945 | 6 May 1946 | |||
10 000 pengő | 171 × 82 mm | Female model | Indication of value in different languages | 15 July 1945 | 17 October 1945 | 31 December 1945 | ||
10 000 pengő (brown adhesive stamp) |
171 × 82 mm | Female model | Indication of value in different languages | 19 December 1945 | 5 July 1946 | |||
100 000 pengő | 179 × 81 mm | Female model | Coat of arms and indication of value in different languages | 23 October 1945 | 12 December 1945 | 31 December 1945 | ||
100 000 pengő (green adhesive stamp) |
179 × 81 mm | Female model | Coat of arms and indication of value in different languages | 19 December 1945 | 5 July 1946 | |||
100 000 pengő (2nd issue) |
179 × 81 mm | Female model | Coat of arms and indication of value in different languages | 27 December 1945 | 31 January 1946 | |||
1 000 000 pengő | 167 × 84 mm | Lajos Kossuth | Géza Mészöly's painting: "Balaton scene" | 16 November 1945 | 28 February 1946 | 24 June 1946 | ||
10 000 000 pengő (107 pengő) |
184 × 84 mm | Lajos Kossuth | Dove carrying an olive branch | 2 April 1946 | ||||
100 000 000 pengő (108 pengő) |
159 × 79 mm | Female model | The Hungarian Parliament Building | 18 March 1946 | 30 April 1946 | 10 July 1946 | ||
1 000 000 000 pengő (109 pengő) |
174 × 84 mm | Female model | Indication of value | 13 May 1946 | ||||
10 000 milpengő (1010 pengő) |
171 × 82 mm | Female model | Indication of value | 29 April 1946 | 27 May 1946 | 31 July 1946 | ||
100 000 milpengő (1011 pengő) |
179 × 81 mm | Female model | Coat of arms and indication of value | 3 June 1946 | ||||
1 000 000 milpengő (1012 pengő) |
167 × 84 mm | Lajos Kossuth | Géza Mészöly's painting: "Balaton scene" | 24 May 1946 | 12 June 1946 | |||
10 000 000 milpengő (1013 pengő) |
184 × 84 mm | Lajos Kossuth | Dove carrying an olive branch | 18 June 1946 | ||||
100 000 000 milpengő (1014 pengő) |
159 × 79 mm | Female model | The Hungarian Parliament Building | 3 June 1946 | 24 June 1946 | |||
1 000 000 000 milpengő (1015 pengő) |
174 × 84 mm | Female model | Indication of value | 27 June 1946 | ||||
10 000 b.‑pengő (1016 pengő) |
171 × 82 mm | Female model | Indication of value | 3 June 1946 | 1 July 1946 | 31 July 1946 | ||
100 000 b.‑pengő (1017 pengő) |
179 × 81 mm | Female model | Coat of arms and indication of value | 2 July 1946 | ||||
1 000 000 b.‑pengő (1018 pengő) |
167 × 84 mm | Lajos Kossuth | Géza Mészöly's painting: "Balaton scene" | 4 July 1946 | ||||
10 000 000 b.‑pengő (1019 pengő) |
184 × 84 mm | Lajos Kossuth | Dove carrying an olive branch | 8 July 1946 | ||||
100 000 000 b.‑pengő (1020 pengő) |
159 × 79 mm | Female model | The Hungarian Parliament Building | 11 July 1946 | ||||
1 000 000 000 b.‑pengő (1021 pengő) |
174 × 84 mm | Female model | Indication of value | Never | - |
[edit] Russian Red Army issues
In 1944, during the Soviet occupation of Hungary, the Red Army issued paper money without cover on the occupied territories. These banknotes were of poor quality, and aggravated the inflation of the pengő.
Red Army series | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Obverse | Reverse | Issued | Withdrawn | |
1 pengő | 135 × 70 mm | Indication of value | Indication of value | 1944 | 28 February 1946 | ||
2 pengő | 138 × 69 mm | ||||||
5 pengő | 135 × 67 mm | ||||||
10 pengő | 161 × 81 mm | ||||||
20 pengő | 165 × 84 mm | ||||||
50 pengő | 179 × 90 mm | ||||||
100 pengő | 184 × 97 mm | ||||||
1000 pengő | 194 × 104 mm |
[edit] Tax bills
Adópengő (tax-pengő) was introduced on 1 January 1946. The aim was to create a numerical basis for budget calculations, which was independent from the daily changes. The index was created daily by the Institute for Economic Research (then: Magyar Gazdaságkutató Intézet, now: GKI Gazdaságkutató Zrt.) based on retail prices (weights: food and other agricultural products: 50%, industrial products (market price): 30%, and industrial products (fixed price): 20%).[4] The so-called adójegy (tax bill - a bond for adópengő with two months maturity) was introduced in May 1946. First, tax bills were used to pay taxes and to register bank deposits and bank credits. From 23 June it was also used to pay public utility charges and from 8 July it became a legal tender, replacing the pengő, which almost totally lost its value by this time. When the tax-bills became legal tender, the even more serious adópengő inflation replaced the pengő inflation.[5]
The "Ludas Matyi" humor magazine explains aptly the relationship between the pengő and the adópengő: "The pengő was the piece of paper that had no value, and the adópengő that was used to measure the value of the pengő."
Tax bills were designed by Endre Horváth.
Tax bills | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Obverse | Reverse | Printed | Issued | Withdrawn | Lapse | |
10 000 adópengő | 136 × 83 mm | Indication of value | Application clause | 28 May 1946 | 13 June 1946 | 31 July 1946 | 30 September 1946 | ||
50 000 adópengő | 25 May 1946 | 30 May 1946 | |||||||
100 000 adópengő | 28 May 1946 | 13 June 1946 | |||||||
500 000 adópengő | 25 May 1946 | 30 May 1946 | |||||||
1 000 000 adópengő | |||||||||
10 000 000 adópengő | 18 July 1946 | 30 September 1946 | |||||||
100 000 000 adópengő | 25 July 1946 | ||||||||
1 000 000 000 adópengő | never | - | - | ||||||
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixels per millimeter, a standard for world banknotes. |
[edit] Savings certificates
The Hungarian Postal Savings Bank issued adópengő non-interest-bearing savings certificates (nem kamatozó pénztárjegy) in June 1946, which also served as legal tender.
10 000 adópengő non-interest-bearing savings certificate | |
---|---|
[edit] Notes
- ^ (Hungarian) www.penzportal.hu (Designers of the pengő banknotes: Zoltán Egri)
- ^ (Hungarian) www.penzportal.hu (Designers of the pengő banknotes: Álmos Jaschik)
- ^ (Hungarian) www.penzportal.hu (Designers of the pengő banknotes: Endre Horváth)
- ^ (Hungarian) mtdp0309.pdf (career of István Varga, an excellent economist of the era)
- ^ (Hungarian) rs1.szif.hu (Economy of Hungary after the Second World War)
Historical currencies of Hungary | ||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||